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On Campus
FOR THE UC SANTA CRUZ COMMUNITY
August 10, 1984
Biochemistry
professor named
academic
vice chancellor
Kivie Moldave, a professor of
biochemistry at UC Irvine
and former chairman of
Irvine's Biological Chemistry Department, has been named academic vice chancellor at UCSC.
Moldave's appointment, approved
by UC Regents July 20, is effective
Sept. 1.
He replaces Professor of Politics
John Marcum in the important
campus post, overseeing academic
planning at UCSC.
As a member of UC Irvine's California College of Medicine, Moldave
received the 1982 Distinguished
Faculty Lecturer Award from the
UCI Academic Senate and the Extraordinarius Award from the UCI
Alumni Association the same year.
He has been editor of numerous
scientific journals and served on the
editorial board of several journals in
his field. He has authored more
than 110 publications, alone or
with others.
Moldave received a B.A. from UC
Berkeley in 1947. an M.S. from USC
[Photograph] Kivie Moldave
in 1950 and a Ph.D. from USC in
1952.
His research is in the monoclonal
antibody field.
[Photograph] Jan Tepper
UCSC officers
help crack
Olympic capers
If Olympic medals for crime-
stopping had been awarded at
the Games in Los Angeles,
UCSC Police Lieutenant Jan Tepper
and Officer Nancy Bader would
have come home with the gold.
The two, on loan to UCLA for security work during the 23rd
Olympiad, turned in peak performances.
Tepper helped Beverly Hills
police arrest burglars who made off
with approximately $200,000 in
jewelry, artwork and artifacts from
a home in the exclusive Southern
California town.
Among the items reported missing were tickets to the Games.
When the burglars, a Los Angeles
couple, attempted to peddle the
tickets, they picked the wrong
place-Tepper's jurisdiction near
the entrance to Olympic Village on
the UCLA campus.
"I saw people selling tickets, so I
checked them out," Tepper said.
"The tickets turned out to be from
the batch that was stolen."
Beverly Hills police, following up
on Tepper's arrest, searched the
home of one of the ticket sellers.
They found $90,000 worth of loot.
Tepper received a commendation
for her effort from UCLA's chief of
police.
Bader, noting a suspicious character near her post, used the help of
a passer-by to apprehend the
37-year-old suspect after he started
running away. The suspect, it
turned out, was wanted on a
$10,000 warrant for burglary and
receiving stolen property.
Top astronomer
named Natural
Sciences dean
Frank D. Drake, a noted
astronomer and a pioneer in
investigating intelligence in
space, has been appointed dean of
[Photograph] Frank Drake
the Division of Natural Sciences.
The position has been filled by
Acting Dean George Gaspari.
As one of the country's premier
radio astronomers, Drake is a
pioneer in planetary studies using
radio astronomy. He made the first
radio survey for intelligent signals
from space.
Drake also has been appointed
professor of astronomy at UCSC.
He received his Bachelor of Engineering degree in physics from
Cornell University in 1952, an M.A.
from Harvard University in 1956,
and a Ph.D. from Harvard in 1958.
He served as associate professor
of astronomy at Cornell from 1964-
66 and as professor from 1966-76.
Drake also served as the director
of the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center at Cornell from
1971 to 1981.
He has been a member of the
National Academy of Sciences
since 1972.

On Campus
FOR THE UC SANTA CRUZ COMMUNITY
August 10, 1984
Biochemistry
professor named
academic
vice chancellor
Kivie Moldave, a professor of
biochemistry at UC Irvine
and former chairman of
Irvine's Biological Chemistry Department, has been named academic vice chancellor at UCSC.
Moldave's appointment, approved
by UC Regents July 20, is effective
Sept. 1.
He replaces Professor of Politics
John Marcum in the important
campus post, overseeing academic
planning at UCSC.
As a member of UC Irvine's California College of Medicine, Moldave
received the 1982 Distinguished
Faculty Lecturer Award from the
UCI Academic Senate and the Extraordinarius Award from the UCI
Alumni Association the same year.
He has been editor of numerous
scientific journals and served on the
editorial board of several journals in
his field. He has authored more
than 110 publications, alone or
with others.
Moldave received a B.A. from UC
Berkeley in 1947. an M.S. from USC
[Photograph] Kivie Moldave
in 1950 and a Ph.D. from USC in
1952.
His research is in the monoclonal
antibody field.
[Photograph] Jan Tepper
UCSC officers
help crack
Olympic capers
If Olympic medals for crime-
stopping had been awarded at
the Games in Los Angeles,
UCSC Police Lieutenant Jan Tepper
and Officer Nancy Bader would
have come home with the gold.
The two, on loan to UCLA for security work during the 23rd
Olympiad, turned in peak performances.
Tepper helped Beverly Hills
police arrest burglars who made off
with approximately $200,000 in
jewelry, artwork and artifacts from
a home in the exclusive Southern
California town.
Among the items reported missing were tickets to the Games.
When the burglars, a Los Angeles
couple, attempted to peddle the
tickets, they picked the wrong
place-Tepper's jurisdiction near
the entrance to Olympic Village on
the UCLA campus.
"I saw people selling tickets, so I
checked them out," Tepper said.
"The tickets turned out to be from
the batch that was stolen."
Beverly Hills police, following up
on Tepper's arrest, searched the
home of one of the ticket sellers.
They found $90,000 worth of loot.
Tepper received a commendation
for her effort from UCLA's chief of
police.
Bader, noting a suspicious character near her post, used the help of
a passer-by to apprehend the
37-year-old suspect after he started
running away. The suspect, it
turned out, was wanted on a
$10,000 warrant for burglary and
receiving stolen property.
Top astronomer
named Natural
Sciences dean
Frank D. Drake, a noted
astronomer and a pioneer in
investigating intelligence in
space, has been appointed dean of
[Photograph] Frank Drake
the Division of Natural Sciences.
The position has been filled by
Acting Dean George Gaspari.
As one of the country's premier
radio astronomers, Drake is a
pioneer in planetary studies using
radio astronomy. He made the first
radio survey for intelligent signals
from space.
Drake also has been appointed
professor of astronomy at UCSC.
He received his Bachelor of Engineering degree in physics from
Cornell University in 1952, an M.A.
from Harvard University in 1956,
and a Ph.D. from Harvard in 1958.
He served as associate professor
of astronomy at Cornell from 1964-
66 and as professor from 1966-76.
Drake also served as the director
of the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center at Cornell from
1971 to 1981.
He has been a member of the
National Academy of Sciences
since 1972.